-By Frank Scheck
For movie details, please click here.
Hollywood has been presenting so many visions of the apocalypse
lately that you have to wonder whether the studio executives know
something that we don't. The latest example is
Legion, a
ridiculous piece of hokum that is far more fun than it has a right
to be. Although not exactly designed to appeal to religious
folks—for one thing, the villain is no less than God—the film has
enough entertaining action and sly humor to please its target
audience. Clearly, this doesn't include critics, who were not
allowed to see the film until opening day.
The last time the Supreme Being got seriously pissed off at us, he
sent a devastating flood. Now, apparently having watched too many
George Romero movies in the interim, he has dispatched a legion of
easily picked-off zombies, demonstrating a disturbing loss of
efficiency.
Attempting to thwart his plans is a rogue angel, Michael (Paul
Bettany), who has determined that mankind's sole hope for salvation
is a new messiah, the unborn child of a pregnant and clearly not
virginal waitress (Adrianne Palicki) at a remote roadside diner
appropriately named Paradise Falls.
Huddled inside is the usual group of disparate types typically
found in a disaster movie or Stephen King novel. They include the
gruff café owner (Dennis Quaid), his mechanic son (Lucas Black), a
no-nonsense cook (Charles S. Dutton), an upscale couple (Kate
Walsh, Jon Tenney) whose car has broken down, their rebellious teen
daughter (Willa Holland) and a mysterious, pistol-packing stranger
(Tyrese Gibson).
The first indication that something is amiss comes in the form of
an initially sweet old lady who quickly transforms into a
throat-chomping, spider-walking monster. This leads to periodic
attacks by hordes of similarly possessed figures, including an ice
cream-truck driver with elongated limbs and a little boy in need of
an exorcist.
Eventually, it leads to a showdown between Michael and the angel
Gabriel (Kevin Durand), the latter wielding an impressive set of
metallic wings that serve equally well as bullet deflectors and
lethal daggers.
As the above description demonstrates, the goings-on in Legion are
seriously silly (not to mention more than a little derivative of
endless movies, especially the Terminator series), but director
Scott Stewart has provided enough stylish finesse to make the
proceedings a real hoot. He also has assembled an atypically
talented cast for this sort of thing, with Bettany a particularly
powerful presence as the butt-kicking angel.
-
The Hollywood Reporter
Film Review: Legion
A rogue angel attempts to protect mankind from God's wrath in this silly but entertaining piece of hokum.
Jan 25, 2010
-By Frank Scheck
For movie details, please click here.
Hollywood has been presenting so many visions of the apocalypse lately that you have to wonder whether the studio executives know something that we don't. The latest example is
Legion, a ridiculous piece of hokum that is far more fun than it has a right to be. Although not exactly designed to appeal to religious folks—for one thing, the villain is no less than God—the film has enough entertaining action and sly humor to please its target audience. Clearly, this doesn't include critics, who were not allowed to see the film until opening day.
The last time the Supreme Being got seriously pissed off at us, he sent a devastating flood. Now, apparently having watched too many George Romero movies in the interim, he has dispatched a legion of easily picked-off zombies, demonstrating a disturbing loss of efficiency.
Attempting to thwart his plans is a rogue angel, Michael (Paul Bettany), who has determined that mankind's sole hope for salvation is a new messiah, the unborn child of a pregnant and clearly not virginal waitress (Adrianne Palicki) at a remote roadside diner appropriately named Paradise Falls.
Huddled inside is the usual group of disparate types typically found in a disaster movie or Stephen King novel. They include the gruff café owner (Dennis Quaid), his mechanic son (Lucas Black), a no-nonsense cook (Charles S. Dutton), an upscale couple (Kate Walsh, Jon Tenney) whose car has broken down, their rebellious teen daughter (Willa Holland) and a mysterious, pistol-packing stranger (Tyrese Gibson).
The first indication that something is amiss comes in the form of an initially sweet old lady who quickly transforms into a throat-chomping, spider-walking monster. This leads to periodic attacks by hordes of similarly possessed figures, including an ice cream-truck driver with elongated limbs and a little boy in need of an exorcist.
Eventually, it leads to a showdown between Michael and the angel Gabriel (Kevin Durand), the latter wielding an impressive set of metallic wings that serve equally well as bullet deflectors and lethal daggers.
As the above description demonstrates, the goings-on in Legion are seriously silly (not to mention more than a little derivative of endless movies, especially the Terminator series), but director Scott Stewart has provided enough stylish finesse to make the proceedings a real hoot. He also has assembled an atypically talented cast for this sort of thing, with Bettany a particularly powerful presence as the butt-kicking angel.
-
The Hollywood Reporter